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Call of the Sea

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Call of the Sea

Dec 8, 2020

Main game

3.42 average rating based on 344 ratings

5
36
4
127
3
134
2
40
1
7
Call of the Sea is a first-person adventure puzzle game set in the 1930's that tells the story of Norah, a woman on the trail of her missing husband's expedition. The search takes place on a strange but beautiful island in the South Pacific, filled with secrets waiting to be unearthed. It’s an otherworldly tale of mystery, adventure, and self-discovery.
Release Dates
Dec 08, 2020 (Worldwide)
PC (Microsoft Windows), Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S
May 11, 2021 (Worldwide)
PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5
Sep 09, 2025 (Worldwide)
Nintendo Switch
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User Stats
1753
In Collection
125
Wish Listed
25
Playing
978
Backlogged
How Long Is Call of the Sea?
Main story: 6.5 hours
Main + extras: 6.9 hours
100% completion: 8.2 hours
Total completions: 40
Related Content
SuperEffective
SuperEffective gave Mar 11, 2022
SuperEffective gave Mar 11, 2022
Colorful, calming, but a little infuriating with the puzzles
This review is for the Xbox One version

I played this game as part of the Xbox Game Pass collection and immediately dived into the colorful, beautiful scenery and the calming sounds of the island. The story is intriguing, you walk around an island, and solve puzzles for a fairly short gameplay.

Story

It's 1934 and you play as Norah, who arrives at this island to find out what happened to her husband, who disappeared on an expedition previously. You find yourself on an unknown tropical island that has remnants of a lost civilization, which you slowly uncover pieces of throughout the course of the game. As you explore the island further, you not only put together what happened to your husband, you dive further into your own identify and heritage.

Gameplay

It's a narrative walking simulator with puzzle solving. At first, it feels like the puzzles mesh well with the environment and you can explore the areas you're in to solve it. However, as you progress in the game, the puzzles become rather vague and infuriating to figure out; almost like the developer lost some steam later in the game, and just threw in whatever. I was a little annoyed that I had to look up answers …

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I played this game as part of the Xbox Game Pass collection and immediately dived into the colorful, beautiful scenery and the calming sounds of the island. The story is intriguing, you walk around an island, and solve puzzles for a fairly short gameplay.

Story

It's 1934 and you play as Norah, who arrives at this island to find out what happened to her husband, who disappeared on an expedition previously. You find yourself on an unknown tropical island that has remnants of a lost civilization, which you slowly uncover pieces of throughout the course of the game. As you explore the island further, you not only put together what happened to your husband, you dive further into your own identify and heritage.

Gameplay

It's a narrative walking simulator with puzzle solving. At first, it feels like the puzzles mesh well with the environment and you can explore the areas you're in to solve it. However, as you progress in the game, the puzzles become rather vague and infuriating to figure out; almost like the developer lost some steam later in the game, and just threw in whatever. I was a little annoyed that I had to look up answers more often that I wanted. Maybe I'm just not that clever, lol.

Overall

It's short with colorful scenery on a tropical island, and has a strong start. The story is really interesting, I liked the development of Norah's character and the discoveries with the lost civilization. If you don't mind some of the puzzles being a bit vague and might have to look up answers, I think this game is worth playing when it goes on sale on Steam or available on the Xbox Game Pass.

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V1CGaming
V1CGaming gave Jan 14, 2021
V1CGaming gave Jan 14, 2021
An adventure game with a short interesting story.
This review is for the PC (Microsoft Windows) version

Call of the Sea is a really nice relaxing puzzle game with a really decent story. The puzzle solving is fun, if you like those type of games you will love this game. It's a fantastic game about love, friendship, mystery and the struggle of terminal disease. The story is what matters in this game, being able to experience that incredible history was amazing.

The game has some technical issues but it really doesn't matter and doesn't affect the gameplay in any way. The puzzles even though there's not a lot of them are really good and pretty well-balanced in difficulty which progresses with every chapter. I highly recommend this game to everyone who found The Witness or narrative experiences like What Remains of Edith Finch an unmissable treat.

Yaru
Yaru gave Mar 18, 2023
Yaru gave Mar 18, 2023
Yaru's review of Call of the Sea
This review is for the PC (Microsoft Windows) version

This... is not a good game.

The art is beautiful, I'll give it that much, but the puzzles are really not good, with solutions bordering on the ridiculous, and the plot, while it has potential, ends up being very, very predictable. A shame.

RadicalMooseLamb
RadicalMooseLamb gave Feb 7, 2026
RadicalMooseLamb gave Feb 7, 2026
One of a Kind Story with Brilliant Puzzling.
This review is for the PC (Microsoft Windows) version

There may be other reviews that are giving details about the story but I feel like to know anything givers away too much of the magic that is the story. If you are a fan of dark and mysterious things you may begin to add up the hints, but the story is in how unique the experience is.

Norah is wonderfully brave and daring. Where other characters in her shoes have succumbed to madness she experiences joy and wonder. She's been suffering a lifelong illness that left her weakened and frail. So the ability to move without a cane is a wonderous first for her. She's inquisitive and her dairy fills with the details of her journey. She is both studying the history but also writing details to the mystery so that you may piece together the puzzles of the island.

The puzzles are also brilliant. These aren't the cheap simple puzzles you get in most narrative forward puzzle games. They are layered and make you think on a few different levels. They leave you feeling rather brilliant for solving them. I didn't feel that any of them overstayed their welcome. And I finished the overall story in a brisk …

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There may be other reviews that are giving details about the story but I feel like to know anything givers away too much of the magic that is the story. If you are a fan of dark and mysterious things you may begin to add up the hints, but the story is in how unique the experience is.

Norah is wonderfully brave and daring. Where other characters in her shoes have succumbed to madness she experiences joy and wonder. She's been suffering a lifelong illness that left her weakened and frail. So the ability to move without a cane is a wonderous first for her. She's inquisitive and her dairy fills with the details of her journey. She is both studying the history but also writing details to the mystery so that you may piece together the puzzles of the island.

The puzzles are also brilliant. These aren't the cheap simple puzzles you get in most narrative forward puzzle games. They are layered and make you think on a few different levels. They leave you feeling rather brilliant for solving them. I didn't feel that any of them overstayed their welcome. And I finished the overall story in a brisk 7.7 hours. All in one go.

The choice at the end made me reflect on my own past and current loves. As someone quite sentimental this was an incredibly touching story. About trust, loyalty and going the distance. Any distance.

You have to play this

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Lilirose
Lilirose gave Dec 9, 2024
Lilirose gave Dec 9, 2024
Lilirose's review of Call of the Sea

Visivamente sontuoso, si resta a bocca aperta davanti a certi scorci. La storia è interessante e gli enigmi ben inseriti nella trama, benché un po' troppo semplici. Breve, ma non è necessariamente un male: la vicenda ha il tempo di dipanarsi e non viene tirata per le lunghe.

mmeagan
mmeagan gave Jan 1, 2023
mmeagan gave Jan 1, 2023
A Hidden Gem

I happened to stumble across this game during a sale, and I'm so glad I picked it up. The puzzles ranged from ok to good to frustrating. I was proud of myself when I solved some, but I'm very impatient and had to look up a few of them. The music and visuals give this game it's form but the story was its heart. It's part love story, and I got so invested in reuniting these two cuties. I hope this game gets lots of love, and I'll be checking out Out of the Blue's other games.

I played this on my PS5, and the platinum was kinda fun, you get rewarded for exploring and some of the trophy names are pretty funny especially "Fawning Developers" and "You looked that up in a guide!"

AndyMuller
AndyMuller gave Mar 21, 2021
AndyMuller gave Mar 21, 2021
Call of the Sea
This review is for the Xbox Series X|S version

A relaxing game with a mysterious story and tough puzzles.

Nelemania
Nelemania updated their status Jun 2, 2024
Nelemania updated their status Jun 2, 2024

Beautiful art, especially for the architecture and underwater parts, great voice acting, female lead, someone called it "1930s charm with eldritch flirtation" and I am stealing that. The sound is also amazing, adding a lot to the atmosphere and being part of some of the puzzles. There are definitely slight Myst/Riven vibes at times, and I needed a walkthrough once, but when I understood that all you have to do is fill in your little book, and once the pages are filled, you definitely have all the information to solve the puzzles, they were not too hard and made sense.

I wonder why so many older reviews complain about the walking speed, because it has fast movement. Maybe they added it later because of the complaints? Her being very slow at the beginning is actually story relevant, as is her being able to walk faster later on. I had no problems with this and sometimes even chose to walk slowly to take in the environments. Swimming fast felt very satisfying.

The chapters not only separate the story, but also the world. You can jump into all the chapters at the start (great for achievement hunters), but once you enter a …

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Beautiful art, especially for the architecture and underwater parts, great voice acting, female lead, someone called it "1930s charm with eldritch flirtation" and I am stealing that. The sound is also amazing, adding a lot to the atmosphere and being part of some of the puzzles. There are definitely slight Myst/Riven vibes at times, and I needed a walkthrough once, but when I understood that all you have to do is fill in your little book, and once the pages are filled, you definitely have all the information to solve the puzzles, they were not too hard and made sense.

I wonder why so many older reviews complain about the walking speed, because it has fast movement. Maybe they added it later because of the complaints? Her being very slow at the beginning is actually story relevant, as is her being able to walk faster later on. I had no problems with this and sometimes even chose to walk slowly to take in the environments. Swimming fast felt very satisfying.

The chapters not only separate the story, but also the world. You can jump into all the chapters at the start (great for achievement hunters), but once you enter a new chapter you can't go back, so backtracking is minimal, which I like. They also add shortcuts once you have explored everything, so if you need to backtrack a bit you will be there quickly.

I loved the underwater parts. I usually hate that in games, but here I was hoping for more. I can see myself going back and trying to get more achievements just to relive the atmosphere of some parts of the game.

The ending(s) are sufficient and you need to stay through the credits for a bit more of the feels. You can easily get both endings if you just save at the right moment and you will know when that is.

On a scale of horror and gore it is a 2 out of 10. People die and there is blood and there is occasionally something spooky, but it is never shown in too much detail and not the center of the game.

As with most walking sim/story driven - puzzle games there is no replayability besides the achievements and I missed a lot of them as it seems.

All in all I had a very good time with this Call of the Sea. I hope the devs will "call"again "Out of the Blue" in the future. :D

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anarchistica
anarchistica updated their status Mar 9, 2023
anarchistica updated their status Mar 9, 2023

This is free in the Epic store this week:

https://store.epicgames.com/en-US/p/call-of-the-sea

Next week we get Warhammer 40.000: Gladius - Relics of War.

mmeagan
mmeagan updated their status Jan 1, 2023
mmeagan updated their status Jan 1, 2023

5 stars! 5 stars! It was sitting at 4, but the ending had me in a choke hold. I cried at the end. Then I couldn't move from my couch until I platinumed the game. The story was engrossing, and the love and dedication Harry and Norah had for each other was inspiring. I'm not big into 1st POV or puzzle games but this is definitely the exception for me. A quick mention of how fitting the music was and elevated the experience by setting the perfect tone. The puzzles were ok, I was proud of myself when I solved that but I'm very impatient and had to look up a bunch of them. I think chapter 4 and 6 were my favourites (definitely NOT 3, but it was cool with the organ and the maybe-maybe not creature watching you from the ocean's horizon!)

Chovus
Chovus updated their status May 6, 2022
Chovus updated their status May 6, 2022

Beat during free trial on xbox gold. Got to love it when they offer free play for longer than it took to beat the game. This was not my kind of game but I enjoyed it well enough. The art was excellent, both sound and visual. I liked how colorful the environments were. The story was interesting with all the ancient alien megalithic machine stuff. I definitely seen some similarities with Stargate, Arrival, Assassin's Creed, X files and the classic mermaid love story, among others. I am not sure if the lore was trying to say that aquatic aliens were enslaving people and transforming them into mermaids to be more useful to them, or if humans evolved from an aquatic alien. And it was not clear at all why the protagonist could not survive as human and was essentially a mermaid trapped as a landlubber.

While the sci fi was thought provoking, the actual mechanics of the game were a bit annoying. Not my kind of puzzles, too much obscurity and trial and error. Chapter 1 was good with simple puzzles. I liked the bridge one where all I had to do was figure out which symbol meant what, and …

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Beat during free trial on xbox gold. Got to love it when they offer free play for longer than it took to beat the game. This was not my kind of game but I enjoyed it well enough. The art was excellent, both sound and visual. I liked how colorful the environments were. The story was interesting with all the ancient alien megalithic machine stuff. I definitely seen some similarities with Stargate, Arrival, Assassin's Creed, X files and the classic mermaid love story, among others. I am not sure if the lore was trying to say that aquatic aliens were enslaving people and transforming them into mermaids to be more useful to them, or if humans evolved from an aquatic alien. And it was not clear at all why the protagonist could not survive as human and was essentially a mermaid trapped as a landlubber.

While the sci fi was thought provoking, the actual mechanics of the game were a bit annoying. Not my kind of puzzles, too much obscurity and trial and error. Chapter 1 was good with simple puzzles. I liked the bridge one where all I had to do was figure out which symbol meant what, and exploring rewarded the answers. That felt satisfying and I actively wanted to explore and find more content rather than just crack the code and move on. Chapter 2 was where I had to start looking up the solutions. Assembling the torn up page was a good puzzle mechanically but I had what I thought looked ok but seemed like some pieces were missing. I was not sure if there was a completion state and it would have been useful if she commented that my solution was wrong. Then matching up those symbols to the totems was a huge WTF. While I understood that it wanted me to match the symbols to the appropriate totem, I had no idea how I was supposed to tell that. Whatever just use the guide. Then the stupid lenses machine. The game should not have let me even use that machine before getting the solution, and it was around this point that I realized all information needed to solve the puzzles was written in the log. Chapter 3 was even more annoying. I found the sound frequencies from the little keyboard and figured I had to input those into the 3 knob machine. But that was a stupid trial and error fiddle with the knobs until I stumbled upon the right setting. How is that even a puzzle? I knew the date and realized it was new moon, but incorrectly assumed that meant the tide level was at the lowest point. I had missed the end puzzle path with the tide level markings. I figured out the puzzle from there but that was ridiculously convoluted. I solved chapter 4 on my own for the most part, though it took me some time I figure out she was supposed to use the microphone thing to sing. I had trouble with the transition puzzle because it was dumb how they assigned quadrants; why the hell would you use the 4 cardinal directions to indicate which quadrant? That was more obtuse than necessary. The generator puzzle (one that I have done countless times in other games where pressing a button changes the 2 adjacent buttons as well) and the Simon says drum puzzle were dumb because it made no sense that they needed to be completed that way. They should have designed something more realistic for the situation. Chapter 5 was my favorite with much of the lore and plenty of lovely environments. I never want to do those damn timing puzzles again though. I aced the gargoyle bridge puzzle in 6 but the constellation puzzle made me want to lay down and stop playing. Like there were too many possible options to try and I really did not want to fiddle with it, so I just used the guide. I chose the ending for her to go off and be a mermaid or whatever. Then loaded and watched the other, but it was sad because she died in only a few years.

It was a short game with minimal replayability. Very well made but some of the puzzles were either lazy tropes or way too complicated. But then again this was not my kind of game, and my type of puzzle solving is more about killing dozens of enemies to see which weapon/tactic kills them the best. I would never pay for this game but I can give it a solid 7.0/10.

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BMO
BMO updated their status Nov 16, 2021
BMO updated their status Nov 16, 2021

Another game I wanted to play leaves Game Pass before I have a chance. Such is life.